Yes Bank Plans to Raise $1.2 Billion to Boost Capital, CEO Says
“The number one priority would be raising capital,” Yes Bank CEO Ravneet Gill says.
(Bloomberg) -- Yes Bank Ltd., Asia’s worst-performing bank stock this quarter, plans to raise $1.2 billion over 18 months to bolster its capital buffer through a mix of public and private share sales, Chief Executive Officer Ravneet Gill said.
Gill took over in March pledging to improve transparency after his predecessor, founder Rana Kapoor, was forced out by the Indian central bank for inadequate disclosure of stressed loans. The new chief has had a tough ride as rising bad debts and an unexpected loss sent the stock down about 57% this quarter, the worst performance among 569 lenders in Asia.
“The number one priority would be raising capital,” Gill said in an interview in Mumbai on Monday, adding that the infusion would take place in two almost equal tranches with the first likely by the end of September. “Effectively, what we need is growth capital.”
India’s shadow banking woes that emerged last September have revealed cracks in Yes Bank’s balance sheet. The country’s fourth-largest private-sector bank has 200 billion rupees ($2.9 billion) of exposure to junk-rated firms, including Dewan Housing Finance Corp. and parts of Anil Ambani’s conglomerate — companies at the heart of the unfolding crisis.
Gill said he’s been “personally involved on a day-to-day basis,” in dealing with large companies facing repayment difficulties, including for loans extended to Ambani’s firms, Dewan and the Essel Group. The three account for about two-third of the 100 billion rupees of loans on the lender’s watchlist, he said.
This list won’t see any significant additions, according to Gill, and Yes Bank plans to focus more on cash-flow-based underwriting going forward to ensure timely repayment. The lender also wants to grow retail lending by leveraging its digital platform.
Downgrade Calls
Analysts have been downgrading Yes Bank’s stock on concerns over the extent of further deterioration in asset quality and lingering worries over corporate governance after the exit of several of its board members. The proportion of “sell” calls on the stock has reached the highest in nearly a decade, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
Such concerns were heightened last month when India’s central bank, in a rare step, appointed a former deputy governor to Yes Bank’s board after the lender set aside 36.6 billion rupees for loan losses and other provisioning, pushing it to a surprise quarterly loss.
The regulator’s move was a “big positive,” Gill said. “They wanted to open another channel of communication, they wanted to strengthen the governance of the board, they wanted to make sure the board is independent.”
Yes Bank needs all the help it can get in reassuring investors as Gill works to “expedite” fund raising. The bank’s capital buffers have fallen as bad-loan provisioning surged, constraining its ability to extend credit.
Its core equity capital ratio or CET1 fell to 8.4% as of March 31, the lowest among the top five private-sector lenders in the country, from 9.7% a year earlier.
“At the end of the day every organization goes though ups and downs,” Gill said. “Are these challenging times for Yes Bank? These are challenging times for Yes Bank, but I think people underestimate the resilience of the organization.”
--With assistance from Anto Antony.
To contact the reporters on this story: Suvashree Ghosh in Mumbai at sghosh186@bloomberg.net;Baiju Kalesh in Mumbai at bkalesh@bloomberg.net
To contact the editors responsible for this story: Marcus Wright at mwright115@bloomberg.net, Russell Ward, Candice Zachariahs
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